Ransomware to cost govt $30 bn  

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Cyber-attacks have contributed to a loss of more than $60 billion in decentralised finance (DeFi) currency since 2012 — $44 billion of that vanished during the last 12 months, according to the report by cyber protection company Acronis…reports Asian Lite News

Ransomware is set to cause $30 billion in damages to global organisations by 2023, remaining the top cyber threat to the enterprises as well as governments, a report showed on Wednesday.

Cyber-attacks have contributed to a loss of more than $60 billion in decentralised finance (DeFi) currency since 2012 — $44 billion of that vanished during the last 12 months, according to the report by cyber protection company Acronis.

Ransomware underlines how over-complexity in IT and infrastructure leads to increased attacks.

Nearly half of all reported breaches during the first half of 2022 involved stolen credentials, which enable phishing and ransomware campaigns, according to the report.

To extract credentials and other sensitive information, cybercriminals use phishing and malicious emails as their preferred infection vectors.

Nearly one per cent of all emails contain malicious links or files, and more than one-quarter (26.5 per cent) of all emails were delivered to the user’s inbox (not blocked by Microsoft365).

“Organisations of all sizes need a holistic approach to cybersecurity that integrates everything from anti-malware to email-security and vulnerability-assessment capabilities,” said Candid Wuest, VP of Cyber Protection Research.

Ransomware gangs, like Conti and Lapsus$, are inflicting serious damage.

The Conti gang demanded $10 million in ransom from the Costa Rican government and has published much of the 672GB of data it stole.

Lapsus$ stole 1 TB of data and leaked credentials of over 70,000 Nvidia users. The same gang also stole 30 GB worth of T-Mobile’s source code.

“Six hundred malicious email campaigns made their way across the internet in the first half of 2022 and 58 per cent of the emails were phishing attempts. Another 28 per cent of those emails featured malware,” the report noted.

The business world is increasingly distributed, and in Q2, an average of 8.3 per cent of endpoints tried to access malicious URLs.

“In addition, we will see initial attacks in the metaverse that will exploit smart contract vulnerabilities,” said the report by cyber-security firm Check Point Software.

There has been a 42 per cent increase in cyber attacks globally, with ransomware becoming number one threat.

Ransomware groups have become more structured and operate like regular businesses, with set targets to hit, as cyber attacks become state-level weapons.

“We have seen huge increases in cyberattacks against organisations in all sectors and all countries this year. Unfortunately, this will only get worse especially with ransomware now being the number one threat to organisations,” said Maya Horowitz, VP Research at Check Point Software.

Due to the implementation of internet macros being blocked by default in Microsoft office, the more sophisticated malware families will accelerate the development of new infection chains, with different file types that are password protected to prevent detection as sophisticated social engineering attacks increase. “Hacktivist groups will continue to align their attacks with the agenda of their chosen nation state, particularly as the Russia-Ukraine war is still ongoing,” the report noted.

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